Chad's army said it had killed more than 200 militants from
Boko Haram on Tuesday in a battle in the northeastern Nigerian towns of Gambaru
and Ngala, which are near the border with Cameroon.
Chad has deployed 2,500 troops as part of a regional effort
to take on the militant group, which has been fighting for five years to create
an Islamist emirate in northern Nigeria. An estimated 10,000 people died in the
region last year.
Chad's army also destroyed more than a dozen vehicles
equipped with heavy weapons in the battle, and 100 motorcycles used by the
militants, the army high command said in a statement on Wednesday. There was no
independent confirmation of its claim.
Boko Haram fighters also attacked the town of Fotokol in
Cameroon on Wednesday but were repelled, a Chadian military source reached on
the front said by telephone.
Cameroonian Information Minister Issa Tchiroma said the
fighting in Fotokol had lasted several hours.
"The insurgents have been driven out. They tried to
surprise us because the Chadian troops who were in Fotokol had crossed over to
Nigeria," he said.
The attack represents the latest cross-border incursion by
Boko Haram, who operates near Nigeria's borders with Niger, Chad and Cameroon.
Meanwhile, Chad has
also revealed that nine of its soldiers were killed and 21 others were wounded
in a battle with Boko Haram militants in the northeastern Nigerian towns of
Gambaru and Ngala.
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